By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK, March 6 (Reuters) – A federal judge on Friday dismissed a civil lawsuit seeking to hold Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, โand founder Changpeng Zhao liable for transactions that allegedly helped terrorist groups โconduct 64 attacks around the world.
U.S. District Judge Jeannette Vargas in Manhattan said the 535 plaintiffs, including victims โand relatives of victims, did not plausibly allege that the defendants “culpably associated themselves with these terrorist attacks, participated in them as something they wanted to bring about, or sought by their actions to ensure their success.”
The plaintiffs said the attacks occurred between 2017 and โ2024, and attributed them to โ what they called foreign terrorist groups (“FTOs”) including Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, Islamic State, Kataib Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and al Qaeda.
They sought โ to hold Binance and Zhao liable for the alleged transfer of hundreds of millions of dollars of cryptocurrency to and from the FTOs, and billions of dollars of alleged transactions โwith Iranian โusers that benefitted proxies who conducted the attacks.
Vargas โsaid that while Binance and Zhao โmay have been generally aware of the exchange’s role in terrorist financing, their only relationship to the FTOs was that “they, or their affiliates, had accounts on, and have transacted on, the Binance exchange in an armsโ length relationship.”
The judge also called the length of the plaintiffs’ 891-page, 3,189-paragraph complaint “wholly unnecessary” despite the “weighty” allegations. She said the plaintiffs may amend โtheir complaint.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs did not immediately โrespond to requests for comment.
In court papers, Binance and โZhao said they condemned terrorism.
Zhao also โaccused the plaintiffs of trying to “piggyback” on Binance’s November 2023 guilty โplea and $4.32 billion criminal penalty for violating โfederal anti-money-laundering and โsanctions laws, to justify triple damages under the federal Anti-Terrorism Act.
“Binance was pleased to see that the court in this case correctly dismissed these baseless allegations,” a โspokesperson for the exchange โsaid in an email. “Binance takes compliance seriously and has no tolerance for bad โactors on its platform.”
Zhao’s lawyers had no immediate comment.
(Disclosure: Yahoo Finance has a partnership with Coinbase.)
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel โin New York; Editing by Franklin Paul)